The Seeker
Page 17
It was too soon and they would only be confused.
Sucking in a big breath of air, she rubbed her cheeks and walked back into the kitchen. The girls were just as she pictured them, happily eating their homemade breakfast, the smell of syrup dark and rich and sweet in the air.
“I made you a plate,” Kennedy said, placing it on the table.
“It’s good, Mommy,” Kiley said with a happy smile.
“Yeah, Kennedy’s a good chef.”
“Yes, it looks as though she is,” Shawn said sitting down to eat. “But you certainly don’t have to serve us.” She met the hot golden gaze with her own and nearly swooned once again.
“Cooking is a treat in my line of work. It’s a great escape.”
“Besides, you’ll never get her to stop,” Keri said from the couch. “Trust me on that one. She’s just like our grandmother. Always feeding everyone.”
“Sounds good to me,” Shawn said, meaning it. She took a warm soft bite and chewed. It was good. Damn good. She ate slowly, watching as Kennedy stood at the kitchen island sipping her coffee. Monty came in and poured himself a cup. Kennedy made sure to tell him there was plenty. He thanked her and made a hearty plate for himself. He gave Shawn a wink and joked with the kids.
When Shawn looked back at Kennedy she caught her watching her.
Looking away, she wondered what Kennedy had been thinking.
Was it possible that in their crazy, chaotic world where spouses cheated and unstable people shot at them, was it possible that something pure and honest and passionate could be happening? Was that really how the world worked?
Chapter Eight
Yonkers, New York
She had done it. She had finally killed. She paced her little apartment in an excited gait, too keyed up to sit. She had underestimated the thrill, and she was still feeling it, nearly paralyzing, coursing through her veins as if she were still there. She could still hear the pop of the gun, smell the smoke, see the enormous splat and spray of blood.
It had been hours now and she still couldn’t sit still. Her mind kept replaying the sequence of events over and over again. She leaned against the wall and allowed the image of Sloan’s house to fill her mind.
She rang the doorbell at the oversized front door. Sloan answered looking like she had just awakened. Looking like certifiable hell.
“Come in.” Sloan sounded agitated.
She followed her inside, trying not to gape at the enormity of the house. She’d been there before, but this house always took her breath away. Opening up just beyond the entrance, three large rooms merged into one and at its center stood a grandiose staircase. It would’ve been perfect if it weren’t for the smell of cigarette smoke.
“Where’s the other girl?” Sloan asked, shuffling ahead of her. Her feet were covered in white sweat socks and she had on flannel sleep pants and a worn tank. Her tattoos seemed to jump from her arms. “They usually send two of you.”
“She should be here any time,” she lied.
Sloan led her into the kitchen where she opened a drawer and dug out a lighter. She plucked a cigarette from a box in the giant stainless steel freezer and stuck it between her lips. After lighting it, she inhaled deeply.
“You can start in here. Clean all the appliances and countertops and don’t forget the sink.”
She nodded in compliance. Sloan always gave directions for some reason. As if she had no clue what it was she was doing. This time the place didn’t look too messy. Mostly dirty dishes and empty beer bottles. Sloan wasn’t there for long periods of time.
“You’ve been here before, right?” Sloan studied her from across the counter. Yes, she had been there before and Sloan had been in a mood. High as a kite and willing to share details about her crush on Veronica Ryan.
Again she nodded.
“Yeah, I recognize you.” Sloan tapped her temple and some ash fell from the cigarette. Her pupils looked large and her movements were off. She was high.
When she didn’t say anything Sloan pushed off from the counter.
“I’m going to go take a bath. Help yourself to a drink. You can show yourself out when you’re done.” She walked a little ways and then stopped. “Oh.” She snapped her fingers. Turning sharply, she disappeared from the room. When she returned she lazily tossed a stack of twenties on the counter. “Two fifty, right?”
Another nod.
Sloan sucked on her cigarette. “All right, then.” She left, leaving a trail of smoke behind.
Watching her go, she set down her carrying case full of disinfectants, rags, and sponges. The yellow gloves smelled rubbery and stuck to her skin as she got to work scrubbing Sloan’s kitchen. As she worked, she listened to the bath water being run overhead. The sound was strong and loud as if the water were truly cascading downward through the ceiling. After a while, it stopped and then a new sound came. Water jets.
It was all going to play out so perfectly. She smiled and rinsed out the bleach cleaner from the white porcelain sink. It gleamed.
Wiping her brow, she walked into the living room, through the posh furniture, to a showcase room. She referred to it as Sloan’s “ego room.” Frames housing gold and platinum records hung along the walls, trophies of a famous rock star. Cases stood in the corners, showing off signed guitars and clothing that had been worn on stage. She walked along the back wall and looked at the photos of Sloan taken with some of the biggest names in the business. Sloan had quite a little collection.
It was impressive. Anyone would think so. But she wasn’t like everyone else. The room and what it contained and what it represented repulsed her.
She halted in front of another glass case. A large picture of Sloan and Veronica Ryan stood staring at her. The two were side by side, arms behind one another. Their grins said it all. She had seen the photo before but now it held new meaning.
Clenching her fist, she straightened her back and went to the stairs. She stood still for a moment, enjoying the feel of her blood hammering angrily throughout her body. The water jets called to her. Telling her now.
Walking slowly, she ascended the stairs, rubber-gloved hands gripping the banister. She moved silently until she stood outside the master bedroom. The double doors were open and she could smell the stink of marijuana. She entered, knowing the large bathroom was deep within the room on her left. She glanced to her right and stared at the giant four-post bed. Her anger and jealousy flared again as she imagined Sloan making love to Veronica in it. Taking an angry breath, she turned toward the bathroom and reached into the pocket of her apron for her weapon.
She pulled it out slowly and took soft steps into the bathroom. The stench of the weed was strong and she nearly coughed as she entered. The room was warm and muggy, the steam from the water mixing with the weed. She blinked and wiped the sweat from her brow as she focused on Sloan. The bathtub sat ten feet ahead and on her left. She was expecting Sloan’s back to be to her, but it wasn’t. After stepping back quickly, she hid behind the corner and watched. Sloan glistened and moaned, her hands holding fast to the side of the tub. Her knees were bent over the wall of the tub, legs splayed. She clung to the tub tighter, thrusting herself against the flow of the water jet.
She watched in silence as Sloan made love to the water. Her fury grew as she imagined her making the same noises with Veronica Ryan. Fury built as the moans of pleasure came louder and quicker, Sloan throwing her head back in a powerful orgasm. Sloan shuddered and strained, riding the climax out.
She was disgusted. Almost nauseous. The moans, the groans…now she knew what sex with Veronica had sounded like. It stabbed at her in ways she never could’ve imagined. How could Veronica do that? With this woman? Someone who got her kicks from her bathtub? She wiped more sweat away as Sloan swung her legs around and eased back into the water. Sloan took deep breaths and relaxed, submerging her entire body. Sloan reached for the joint, wanting another toke. Pinching it in her fingers, she took a long, deep drag.
The water jets conti
nued to surge, creating noisy bubbles and waves in the water. She approached slowly and stealthily, knowing Sloan couldn’t hear her. She flipped off the safety on her gun. She took another step and aimed, both hands gripping it tightly. Her arms shook as the jealous thoughts plagued her mind, pitting her insides with angry burning holes. Sloan was pathetic, a loser, not nearly good enough for her true love, smoking weed and getting off in her bathtub, too good for the help. What did Veronica see in her? She bit her lower lip and shook her head, knowing she had to do it. She took one last step and stood beside Sloan. Sloan started to turn her head, startled and confused.
The gunshot was deafening and her ears rang as she watched the bullet tear through Sloan’s temple and exit her skull, blood and tissue splattering the tub and the wall.
Sloan’s wide eyes went blank and then her head slumped, her chin against her chest. Her body began to slide farther into the tub, the bubbles and waves consuming it.
Carefully, she placed the gun in Sloan’s right hand, curling her fingers around the weapon and then allowing her hand to fall into the water gripping the gun. The water began to turn pink from the heavy amount of blood. There was a sharp smell in the air, overpowering the weed. Spent gunpowder. And then the emerging metallic scent of blood.
She stepped back and stared. Sloan’s head slid all the way into the water. Her knees and feet bobbed at the surface. The water boiled, the pink darkening. Blood and brain tissue oozed down the wall.
She walked away slowly, her mind in a numb sort of shock, her body on autopilot. She reached into her apron and pulled out the letter. Carefully, she placed it on Sloan’s dresser for all to see.
Then she walked to the head of the stairs and stopped. She shook with adrenaline as she realized what she had done. And then she smiled. There was no more Sloan.
She smiled again as she resumed her pacing in her tiny apartment. She had done what was needed to rid Veronica of the people who didn’t love her like she did. Now there was the most important one left to take care of. All she had to do now was find her.
*
Hilton Head, South Carolina
Kennedy put down the letter and sighed. She was sitting on the floor going through the boxes of mail Allen had brought her. She glanced at her watch. It was after eleven. She stood and stretched, unable to sleep but frustrated with the task at hand. She knew the letters were there. She was willing to bet her life on it. But simple, unassuming fan letters were a dime a dozen and her head hurt from the strain of reading each one, analyzing every word.
She kicked the latest box, nudging it with frustration. She had gone through two boxes, and three more remained, but she needed some sleep.
Letters.
They seemed to be her worst nightmare. First they came with the child murders, then they came to harass Keri. Now she was looking for more in regard to Shawn and Veronica. For a brief moment, she wished she could just toss out the boxes and lie on the beach and truly relax. No more letters. No more jumbled words. No more taunting Bible scripture. Just nothing. Nothing but the sound and the smell of the sea.
How nice that would be.
But it came again. That gnawing. It usually came late at night. And she knew it was no use fighting it. Rising, she walked to her laptop and switched it on. Sinking back into an oversized chair, she called up the case file and started reading. Then she brought up each letter and studied the words.
Seek and Ye Shall Find.
Simple block letters. Written in black marker, the kind anyone could buy at a local drugstore. Same with the paper. Sometimes it was white copy paper, sometimes it was lined notebook paper. The only thing they’d ever found on the letters was a tiny hair. Canine. Brown. A terrier mix. Nothing else.
The letters had been postmarked from the southern United States. Sent from hotels, mainly. The UNSUB would mail out the letter to various hotels. The large envelope would contain a smaller one. He would politely ask that the smaller one be placed in their outgoing mail. He always included a twenty-dollar bill for their trouble. The concierges obliged.
He seemed to favor Texas. Houston, Dallas, Austin, Corpus Christi. Only one had come from a different state. St. Louis, Missouri. No rhyme or reason. Not one she could figure out.
She studied one of the letters.
Scott,
Seek and ye Shall find.
Time’s a wasting.
She cringed. Time’s a wasting. He toyed with her, taunted her. And he enjoyed it. She studied the words, the block lettering. What was she missing?
She closed out the letters and called up the photos. She knew every one by heart. The environment, the position of the bodies, exactly where the note was pinned or taped. She lined them up on her screen. Twelve little bodies.
She scanned them all, noting similarities.
They were all blond. Caucasian. Six to nine years of age. All from small towns. Most from the Midwest but two from New York state. The bodies were always found hundreds of miles from where they were taken. Most of the time in New York state, leading them to believe that’s where he resided.
They found canine hairs matching the one from the letter on six of the bodies. Lead-based paint was found under all of their fingernails where they’d tried to claw their way out of something. Each had the same stomach contents. Kentucky Fried Chicken and biscuits. Their last meal.
She looked harder. The bodies were relatively clean, leaving them to believe they had been clothed up until he dumped them. They all had marks on their wrists and ankles where duct tape had been used. Some had the sticky remnants along their mouth and cheeks as well, where he had gagged them. Each child had been manually strangled and sexually assaulted. The UNSUB had carefully cleaned the pubic regions with bleach, yet he left semen on their abdomens, masturbating shortly after killing them.
She studied the way they were positioned. All of them had been placed face down, arms up, palms down. One knee was always raised. Almost as if they were sleeping. He’d cared for them. In his own sick way. He wasn’t able to bring himself to leave them face up. He couldn’t look at them like that. He knew what he was doing was wrong and yet he couldn’t seem to stop himself.
She studied further. Each child held something in its hand. Something the UNSUB used to pacify them with. A balloon, a toy car, a toy baby bottle, a tiny toy soldier. Many of the toys were too old to find in stores. Some dated back to the 1960s.
The UNSUB was clever. Very clever. He was organized. Had elaborately planned each kidnapping. He had a house where he lived alone, somewhere he could take the children and hold them for days. He had old toys. Probably lived in an older house, maybe the one he grew up in. He had a job that allowed him to travel. Blue-collar work. Something that would be easy for him to make money at without putting in a lot of thought or effort, because his main goal was molesting and murdering children. It consumed him night and day. He was always moving toward that goal. The abductions gave him an adrenaline rush, the molesting and holding captive excited him, but the killing gave him the ultimate high.
She rubbed her eyes. The bodies started to run together. They would come to her in her dreams that night. She was sure of it.
Rising, she decided to get some fresh air. She waved at one of Keri’s new security men, who sat reading a magazine on the couch. He nodded. She silenced the alarm and went out the back door and headed for the beach. The night was cool and crisp and the sea sounded calm and it seemed to whisper as it rushed onto the shore.
Her feet sank into the thick sand as she climbed a dune. The moon hung small but bright, showing her the way. A figure startled her when she reached the top.
“Hi.”
It was Shawn. And about a hundred feet back stood Larry or Phil, she couldn’t tell who.
“Hi.”
“Couldn’t sleep?” She was sitting with her knees pulled to her chest, sandals resting in the sand next to her. The moonlight kissed her shoulders. She was wearing a tank and sweatpants. She shivered.
“No
.” Kennedy sank into the sand next to her. She peeled off her button-down shirt and draped it over Shawn’s shoulder.
“Thanks.” She looked sad and tears glistened.
Kennedy nodded. “You okay?”
Shawn dug her hand into the sand. “Oh sure. Probably about as good as you are.”
“That good, huh?”
Shawn laughed. “What a pair we are.”
Kennedy was silent.
“It’s funny, isn’t it? Here we are in this beautiful place, where people play golf and tennis, swim in the sea, ride bikes down endless green trails, soak up the warm sun, watch gators crawl into ponds, and we’re sitting here near midnight wrapped up in our own misery. We’re pathetic. We should be enjoying this.”
“We have a lot going on.”
“Yes, we do. But still. We should be making the most of this. For the kids’ sake at least.”
“They’re happy, aren’t they? They seem happy.”
“They’re having fun but they aren’t naïve. Rory knows something is wrong. She’s asking. She can see it in my face.”
“Have you told her?”
“About what? V and me?”
Kennedy nodded.
“I told her we need to be apart because we aren’t getting along. She asked for how long. I told her I didn’t know.” Shawn wiped away a tear. “She took it well. She didn’t cry. I did. She just took my hand and told me it would be okay.” Shawn laughed. “She actually comforted me.”
“That sounds like Rory.”
“She’s a strong little girl, my daughter.”
“Yes, she is.”
“What about Landon and Luke? Do they know what’s going on?”
“No. They think they’re on vacation. So they’re having a ball.”
“That’s good. What about you, Kennedy? Do you ever have fun?”
Kennedy stared out at the sea.
“I’ll take that as a no.”